TWO BITS MEDIA MISSISSIPPI
  • Home
  • Menu
  • The Files
  • The Haystack
  • Contact

MISSISSIPPI HISTORY

Picture
 - Britannica -
Picture
The community of Union Church was formed primarily by a group of Scotch settlers who left North Carolina around 1805 for the promise of fertile land to be farmed on the eastern banks of the Mississippi River. The town was originally called Scotch Settlement. The founding families were headed by George Torrey, his son Dougald Torrey, Laughlin Currie and Robert Willis.
​ In 1699 a French expedition led by Pierre le Moyne d’Iberville established France’s claim to the lower Mississippi valley. French settlements were soon established at Fort Maurepas, Mobile, Biloxi, Fort Rosalie, and New Orleans.
 - Centreville -
 - Columbia -
Chapel of the Cross Church; Madison, Mississippi: 
The story of the Chapel of the Cross begins as the story of the Johnstone family of North Carolina. John T. Johnstone and his brothers, William and Samuel, began traveling to the new state of Mississippi in the 1820’s purchasing land. John initially bought 524 acres where the Chapel sits today from Mr. Jonathan Coleman who had a log cabin situated one hundred yards from the present day Chapel. Mr. Johnstone remodeled and enlarged this log cabin and then moved his wife, Margaret, and his daughters, Francis and Helen here in 1841. He named his plantation, Annandale, after his ancestral home in Scotland. The rest of the story HERE.
Picture

May 7, 1840:  Natchez Mississippi: 300 Killed in Tornado

Picture
Slave Auction; Lexington, Mississippi Union newspaper; Dec 1843
Picture
Dr Dent; Macon, Mississippi

Feb 18, 1861: Jefferson Davis Inaugural described by The Memphis Appeal

Dec 11, 2022: Vicksburg Daily News: ​Liar, liar, courthouse on fire; Vicksburg’s original courthouse
April 9, 1857 at four o’clock in the morning, cries of “FIRE” were heard throughout the city of Vicksburg. The ancient Temple of Justice, the courthouse, was aflame. Citizens watched in sorrowful awe, helpless to extinguish the destructive blaze that had overtaken the old building. Such an ironic conclusion to the structure that had helped serve the people of Vicksburg as a lookout for fires throughout the city; and it being surrounded by the very source of water, four water cisterns, used by the bucket brigades to fight those fires. Within minutes the flames overcame the tower cupola, and “after swaying for a moment, like a drunken man, came crashing to the ground.”
Picture
​On March 11, 1861, in Montgomery, Alabama, delegates from South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas adopt the Permanent Constitution of the Confederate States of America.

The constitution resembled the Constitution of the United States, even repeating much of its language, but was actually more comparable to the Articles of Confederation–the initial post-Revolutionary War U.S. constitution–in its delegation of extensive powers to the states. The constitution also contained substantial differences from the U.S. Constitution in its protection of slavery, which was “recognized and protected” in slave states and territories. However, in congruence with U.S. policy since the beginning of the 19th century, the foreign slave trade was prohibited. The constitution provided for six-year terms for the president and vice president, and the president was ineligible for successive terms. Although a presidential item veto was granted, the power of the central Confederate government was sharply limited by its dependence on state consent for the use of any funds and resources.

Although Britain and France both briefly considered entering the Civil War on the side of the South, the Confederate States of America, which survived until April 1865, never won foreign recognition as an independent government.

1874: A Matter of Honor in Bay St. Louis

Picture
1878
Picture
Union Officers in the 47th Illinois camped in Oxford, Mississippi in December of 1862.
Picture
1875
1871: Jones County Sheriffs Office
Picture
Dr KS Moffat; Dental Surgeon 1878
Picture
PictureLos Angeles Herald 1907
DEMOCRATS CHOOSE LEADER JOHN SHARP WILLIAM OF MISSISSIPPI
WILLIAMS URGES PARTY TO ACTION
DEMOCRATIC HOUSE LEADER STIRS ASSOCIATES
Mississippi Congressman Says, "Work Together as a Football Team and Win Important Victories"
By Associated Press
WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.-By agreeing to place in nomination for speaker John Sharp Williams of Mississippi, the Democratic members of the house today, in effect, decided to continue him in tho position of minority leader for the Sixtieth congress. The nomination of Mr. Williams was agreed on in a caucus of Democratic members held in the hall of the house of representatives, beginning at 2 o'clock today. Mr. Williams was absent from the chamber when his election took place, but he was soon afterward escorted to the floor by a committee appointed for that purpose and spoke at some length, thanking his fellow members for the confidence reposed In him and promising to serve them to the best of his ability. He especially urged them to stand together in the support of party principles, saying it was most important at this time that the Democrats should have team work. "We should," he said, "work together as a football team and in so doing we may win important victories In the future." Mr. Hay of Virginia introduced a resolution declaring It to be the sense of the campus that a bill for the revision of the tariff should be immediately Introduced and providing that unless it Is promptly reported by the committee on ways and means, the Democrats should object to all unanimous consent agreements for the passage of bills. In the caucus of the house Republicans tonight, Speaker Cannon was renominated. All the old officers of the house were also renominated. The caucus refused to seat Peter A. Porter of the Thirty-fourth New York district, who was elected as an independent.


Picture
Picture
Greenville, Mississippi: Barnum & Baileys Circus Nov 1910
Mississippi vs Alabama Nov 5, 1910
Mississippi vs Alabama Nov 5, 1910
Church Hill is a small unincorporated community in Jefferson County, Mississippi, United States. It is located on the bluffs of the Mississippi River, approximately 18 miles north of Natchez. The geographic features are different from those in the rest of the state; there are high and steep bluffs throughout. At the center intersection of this small community is an old wooden country store, with the old post office in it which was built around 1837. The store bears the name "Wagner's Grocery" on the upper header of the store. The store was closed in the late 1990s, after which it was donated to the Church Hill historic society for preservation. It is the oldest known all-wooden heart pine country store that had a post office in the southeastern United States.
Picture
Okolona Messenger Newspaper Header 1902
BT Hobbs
Death of BT Hobbs; reported by Greenvillte Times Oct 1910
Picture
Picture
Clarion Ledger; Jackson, Mississippi 1912
Picture
Okolona Messnger: Public School Openings Oct 1922
Picture
Picture
Picture
As chairman of the powerful Senate Finance Committee, Harrison was one of the three or four key people behind the creation of the Social Security system in 1935. He promoted low tariffs and reciprocal trade agreements. When the Senate majority leader’s job opened up in 1937, Harrison was expected to win the position, but nose counts put him in a near tie with Kentucky’s Alben Barkley. Harrison’s campaign manager asked Bilbo, the junior member from Mississippi, to consider voting for his fellow Mississippian. Bilbo, a race-baiting demagogue whose base was among tenant farmers, hated the upper-class Harrison, who represented the rich planters. The rivalry between the two was further established over years of disagreement over aspects of the New Deal and how federal money should distributed throughout Mississippi. Bilbo said he would vote for Harrison only if he were personally asked. Harrison replied, “Tell the son of a bitch I wouldn’t speak to him even if it meant the presidency of the United States.” Despite Harrison's support for Roosevelt and his policies, shortly before the vote, the president wrote a letter of support for Barkley. When the ballots were in, Pat Harrison lost by one vote, 37-to-38.

Picture
Dizzy Dean to run for Governor of Mississippi? 1967
Picture
Time Magazine on Oct. 7, 1957.
Time Magazine on Oct. 7, 1957.
 Biloxi native Buddy Jones' Army stint made history, cover of Time [Biloxi Sun Herald]
Percy Sledge: Rolling Stone Magazine announcing his death at his home in Baton Rouge, La  on April 14, 2015: It was in those cotton fields that Sledge began humming and singing a melody that would circle in his head for many years, eventually getting fleshed out into a song called "When a Man Loves a Woman." The tune was the highlight of Sledge's stage show with his early band the Esquire Combos, though they only only gigged on weekends since Sledge worked full time as an orderly at an Alabama hospital. ..............................In 1965 the group played a gig at a University of Mississippi frat house. Record producer Quin Ivy was in the audience that night, and he was blown away by the power of "When a Man Loves a Woman." "If you ever think about cutting a record, come on by," Ivy said. "I love that melody.” Sledge took him up on the offer and tracked the song with a killer backing band that included organist Spooner Oldham. The tape got the attention of Atlantic Records producer/executive Jerry Wexler, who released it as Sledge's debut single in April of 1966.
Picture
PictureAllen Cavett Thompson
Allen Cavett Thompson was the Mayor of Jackson, MS for twenty years. When he retired in 1969 he formed a group called FOCUS, which he touted as a supporter of the freedom of choice in America. Using this “freedom of choice,” he and the group protested public dollars being spent on the airing of Sesame Street. Eventually, a Commission was formed in response to this outcry. The Commission on Educational Television dealt with whether Sesame Street should be allowed to air on public television in April of 1970. Ultimately, the five person commission ruled that Sesame Street should be banned. One of the members of the group, likely irate over the decision, leaked the results to the New York Times where it became a major news story at the time. One of the members of the commission, speaking anonymously, stated that “Some of the members of the commission were very much opposed to showing the series because ‘it uses a highly integrated cast of children'” and furthermore, that the main objection was “mainly that we’re not ready for it yet.”

It is important to note that there was no official statement on WHY the Commission ruled the way that they did, and we only have an anonymous member of the group, one almost certainly against the ruling, to rely on for that being the basis of the decision. That said, however the decision was arrived at, it seems like a foolish decision on the face of the matter, whether it was specifically due to the integration issue or not. Cooney released a statement on the decision, stating that it was “a tragedy for both the white and black children of Mississippi.”

Twenty-two days after their original decision, the Commission reversed themselves and Sesame Street was approved in Mississippi, where it has remained ever since.

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church New Albany Mississippi Plate 1954
Tommy Johnson
Paromita Mitra
Chokwe Lumumba
Marie Wicks
Picture
Picture
Picture
Houston Stackhouse
May 10, 2014: Z-News Mississippi: Jet Magazine Will Cease Print Publication: The Print Pages Carry a Bold Archive of Past Civil Unrest in Mississippi
The magazine helped to spark the modern civil rights movement when it published gruesome photographs of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black Chicagoan who was kidnapped, mutilated and brutally murdered while visiting relatives in Mississippi in 1955
Picture
McKinley's Private Sanatorium; Columbus, ms
Picture
Market Street Looking North Columbus Mississippi MS
Picture
Corinth Mississippi Lloyd's Cafe
Picture
Currier & Ives Civil War Print - Battle of Corinth Mississippi - Oct. 4th, 1862
Picture
Greenville, Ms Holiday Inn
Picture
1947 Ms. Gulf Coast Hurricane 350 Homes & 12 Lives Lost Handcock Co
Picture
1947 Mississippi Gulf Coast Hurricane Rushing Brige Repairs
Picture
1947 Mississippi Gulf Coast Hurricane Cmdr. Cobb Home Pass Christian
Picture
1947 Mississippi Gulf Coast Hurricane Biloxi Beach During Storm
Picture
1947 Mississippi Gulf Coast Hurricane 26 Boats On Train Gulfport
Picture
1947 Mississippi Gulf Coast Hurricane Aerial View Gulfport Shore
Picture
1947 Mississippi Gulf Coast Hurricane Cmdr. Cobb Home Pass Christian
Picture
YMCA Building Main Street Hattiesburg Mississippi
Picture
Marco Hotel Courts Hattiesburg MS
Picture
Hattiesburg, MS, American Legion Civic Center, 1944
Picture
Jackson, Mississippi 1918
Picture
First Baptist Jackson
Picture
Presbyterian Church Holly Springs MS Marshall County
Picture
Lamar Life Insurance Home Office; Jackson, Ms
Picture
Jackson, Mississippi; Capitol Street
Picture
Bellhaven College; Jackson Ms; Fitzhugh Preston Hall
Picture
Drake Motel; Jackson, Ms
Picture
Tarry More Hotel Courts & Restaurant Jackson, Ms
Picture
Laurel Mississippi 1920s Town Oak Street Central Avenue
Picture
YMCA; Laurel, Ms
Picture
Laurel MS YMCA Old Car Auto c1920
Picture
Meridian Mississippi MS 1940s Morocco Lodge Motel - Cafe on Hwy 45 North
Picture
Meridian, Mississippi Nelva Courts and Restaurant
Picture
Meridian Mississippi MS 1940s Northwood Golf Country Club 18th Green
Picture
Meridian Mississippi MS 1940s Post Office
Picture
Meridian Mississippi 1938 Senior High Junior College Football Stadium
Picture
Natchez Mississippi Washington Court General View
Picture
Cherokee Home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Byrne Natchez Mississippi
Picture
Natchez Mississippi 1932 Windy Hill Manor Aaron Burr Madaline
Picture
Natchez Mississippi MS 1940s Monmouth Home General John Quitman
Picture
Natchez Mississippi 1968 Missouri Pacific train depot
Picture
Natchez Mississippi 1982 Mississippi Central train depot
Picture
Natchez MS Bellemont Motor Hotel & Restaurant Swimming Pool
Picture
Natchez Mississippi MS 1940s Auburn Home Built 1815
Picture
Natchez Mississippi MS 1940 Richmond Home John Marshall
Picture
Natchez, Ms: "Bontura" Creole House
Picture
Newton Mississippi view of Gulf Mobile & Ohio train depot
Picture
Aerial View Ingalis Shipyard Pascagoula River Mississippi
Picture
Piney Woods Mississippi 1956 Piney Woods School
Picture
Piney Woods Mississippi MS c1920s Blacks at P W Domestic Science School Building
Picture
1959 Double E Ranch Hereford Cow Senatorbia Mississippi
Picture
Levees Breaking Mississippi Flooding Vicksburg 1863
Picture
Levee and Steamboats on the Mississippi River Vicksburg US Civil War
Warren County Courthouse
Warren County Courthouse Vicksburg, Mississippi
Picture
Vicksburg MS The Rostrum National Military Cemetery
Picture
Vicksburg, Mississippi
Picture
Missouri Monument National Military Park Vicksburg Ms 1940
Picture
1903 Officers Circle National Military Cemetery Vicksburg Mississippi
Picture
1959 Circle H Hereford Ranch Bull Cow Winona Mississippi
Picture
Military Classification Building Camp Shelby Mississippi
Picture
Picture
Byron Patton "Pat" Harrison (August 29, 1881 – June 22, 1941) was a Mississippi politician who served as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives from 1911 to 1919 and in the United States Senate from 1919 until his death.
Picture
1862 $3 The State of Mississippi note from Jackson, MS.
Picture
Picture
Picture
Southern Belle

Twitter

Tweets by @Turn_MS_Blue
Politi-Files
​[c]twobitsmississippi.us 2011- 2023. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
.
  • Home
  • Menu
  • The Files
  • The Haystack
  • Contact